Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 216, 22 July 1921 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND; IND., FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1921.
Tl t r i i
ine L,ove renauium By MARION RUBINCAM
WIN COMES TO CALL. ' Chapter 10. As. I look back I marvel more and more at the happiness of those fin't days in Wellsville. Part of it was the sweetness and freshness and plainness of my little house.' Part of it was the fact that for once in my life I was quiet and at peace. I Constance Bennett, spoken of by the papers as "one of the prettiest of the coming debutantes," actually revelled in the privilege of going to bed at 9 o'clock! But the night of the party we stayed up until much later. When the village had a party it went into it with all its soul, and it was willing to make up its rest the following evening;. The night of my party I danced until late in the morning in fact, until Mrs. Taylor noticed my pallor and sent me home. Ella had a phonograph, as had many of the people around me, and we danced out
are beginning to look like a halfgrown child now." I blushed a little and turned to the mirror. , My hail was growing fast, it waved in little ringlets all over my head, it was inches long now. And I was growing stouter and my face
j had regained most of its nice color. I fo I no longer looked like the blue J and white china doll of my invalid I days.
It was a happy evening. Win danced very weil indeed, with a natural grace that I had rarely found
among the men I had met. And when
I told him that, I meant it as high
praise, for most of the men I met had been trained to dance well before they had been trained to have a
sensible idea on any subject at all
That was a short evening too. My party went home early. But before they went, I had promised to teach
on her broad porch
I sent for a phonograph, too ,and a lot of records, and gave a party the next week, clearing my living room of furniture, so a dozen of us had room to dance. I wore the batiste dress I had made myself. "And you are the plainest dressed person here," Ella remarked in great disappointment. "Connie, where is the heavenly blue tulle with the silver you showed me once? Wear that." "Oh. I don't like that, it's so fancy." I protested. It was a lovely gown, my aunt had paid hundreds for it, and I should have worn it the night of my coming-out ball had not a merciful. Providence , intervened to make3 me ill and send me out here. "I think you are being very sweet and not wearing it because some of the girls can't dress like that," Mrs Taylor told me. But I shook my head. "It isn't appropriate for midsummer or a small dance," I said. "Besides I don't like such elaborate things. I prefer this dress that 1 made myself. I feel this belongs to me. What right have I to these other clothes?"
"Now you are talking like a socialist or a communist. I don't know which." Win teased, coming up to greet us. "I don't know which, either," I answered. "I must get some books on socialism and communism and read up on them." Win looked surprised. "Now why do you want to fill your head with such serious things?" he asked, and began to laugh. "Don't grow serious because your hair is growing longer. Connie, you don't look so much like a small boy, you
Ted and Margery and some of tha
others the new steps.
We don't get them here until they
have stopped " dancing them every
other place," Ella said, as sne tnea a new step I had been doing with Win
throp. ' . .
So a dancing class was tormea mat evening, to meet at my place every Wednesday evening. This evening I sent Mrs. Taylor home in my car with Winthrop to drive her. "You are too tired to walk," I told her, "and Winthrop drives very weil new. You need not worry about him." "I'll bring the car back and put it away. You need not wait up," Win said as he left. But I was sitting up when he came back with the machine. The last of 4nor crtmA anI T cllnnPll
ill j gucDia uau juoi buuv- --- a coat on and went out to the ham-
mocK, warning 10 do quiet a. ic Augments and enjoy the lovely freshners of the night before I went indoors. Winthrop drove tte car into the garage attached to my little house, fixed it and locked the garage. To
return home he had to walk around the corner of my Jittle property, as my house was on the corner. He had to pass -its side, then- turn left and pass its front. Instead rt going along the pavement, be crossed the lawn. There was nothing .. surprising in this It was a short cut. But as he crossed he turned and looked up at the windows of my room, and stood a moment there, quite quiet. My room of course was dark, and the windows were open. I was in the shadows of the trees so he could not see me, but he was outlined against the light Parker was still up and her room had a lamp burning. Win turned away toward the street. I called his name softly. . Tomorrow Win Stays Awhile.
Heart Problems
' Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl of nineteen. - Near my home lives a certain young man I have known for about a year. We have just spoken and talked together until a few weeks ago, when he asked me to go out. That night I was very foolish and allowed the bov to kiss -me . This I have re-
f gretted ever since. ' That night he
did not take me home. I thought ii very funny because he lives not far from me. Since then he has talked many times to me but he has never asked to take me anywhere. Could you give any reason for his
not taking me home? Why does he never ask me to go out with him? If I only had another chance to go out with him I would like to prove to him that I am not what he thinks I am. Would this do any good? PADDLE-ADDLE-ADDLE. You failed to meet the boy's expectations and he was disappointed in you. Probably he considered it cheap when you allowed him to kiss you the first time he took you out. Such an attitude makes me tired. It is evident that he believes in the divine right of males. It was every bit as cheap for him to try to kiss you as it was for you to let him, and fc was unpardonable for him to let you go home without his escort when be invited you. Do not hope for an opportunity to
PAGE FIVE redeem yourself. Even if he asks you to go with him again, you should refuse after the way he treated you. Let this be your lesson' and do net make the same mistake in the future with other young men.
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